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loyola maroon Vol. XLVII Loyola University, New Orleans, La., 70118, Friday, January 29,1971 No. 14 Father Molloy dies The Rev. J. Joseph Molloy, S.J., former vice-president for student affairs at Loyola University, died Wednesday, Jan. 13, at the university following a long illness. A native of Washington, D.C., Father Molloy joined the Loyola faculty as instructor in theology following his ordination in 1947. He left the university in 1951 to become assistant principal and director of athletics at Jesuit High School in Dallas. In 1953 he was named assistant pastor of Immaculate Conception Church in El Paso, Texas, returning to Loyola to serve for five years as director of athletics and assistant professor of theology. In 1959 he became assistant pastor of Immaculate Conception Church in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and held a similar post at Sacred Heart Church in Tampa, Florida, before rejoining Loyola in 1965 as university chaplain. He was appointed dean of students in 1966 and in 1967 was elevated to the position of vice-president for student affairs with overall direction of housing, financial aid, health services, athletics, student organizations and student life. Father Molloy entered the Society of Jesus at Grand Coteau, Louisiana, in 1931 and was ordained a priest by Archbishop Joseph F. Rummel in 1947. He received his bachelor of arts degree from St. Louis University and his licentiate in sacred theology from St. Mary's College, Kansas. During his Jesuit studies, he taught for several years at Jesuit High School in New Orleans. The priest is survived by a brother, Leo T. Molloy of Riverdale, Maryland, and three neices, Mrs. Richard Connallon, Roselle, New Jersey; Mrs. Manuel Rodriquez, East Orange, New Jersey; and Mrs. Charles Whitlow, Hyattsville, Maryland. The Very Rev. President Michael Kennelly, S.J Father Molloy, S.J Women's lib group charges discrimination By STEVE VAKAS Maroon Staff Reporter A national women's liberation group has filed charges of sex discrimination against Loyola with the Department of Health, Hducation and Welfare (HEW). The group, Women's Equity Action League (WEAL), has requested "an immediate compliance review" to include a "full scale investigation of admission policies, financial aid to women students, placement of women graduates; hiring and promotion policies for both staff and faculty; and salary inequities," in a recent letter to HEW. A HEW compliance review is scheduled for Feb. 3 and 4, according to Loyola business manager Tom Preston. During that visit, HEW officials will be investigating Loyola's minority hiring practices, primarily with regard to race. He said that WEAL's charges of sex discrimination came to his attention this week, after he had prepared a report of several hundred pages for the compliance review. Although attention to WEAL's charges might be stalled for several weeks, Preston said he would attempt to clear up the new charges to the satisfaction of the federal officials, making this the last HEW visit. He said next week's review is the university's fourth in the last two years. In its charges against Loyola WEAL states that 79% of all women holding professorial ranks are performing their duties as assistant professors, the lowest rank. The group points out that women hold four positions here as full professors, as opposed to 45 men holding the same title. The charges also claim that two per cent (one woman) holds the position of associate professor. Preston said he doesn't anticipate too much of a problem with the sex discrimination charges. He pointed out that there is a woman on the Board of Regents, Miss Margaret Lauer, and that a woman is president 01 me faculty senate, Miss Janet Riley. In addition to their other requests, WEAL also asked HEW to suspend all current government contract negotiations until "all inequities are eliminated and an acceptable plan of affirmative action is implemented." The charges are filed under Executive Order 11375 which forbids all federal contractors from discriminating on the basis of sex. However, no contracts can be suspended unless the contractor fails to comply with HEW findings. Loyola is but one of the 230 schools charged with sex discrimination by WEAL in the last year. Among others, WEAL has charged the entire state university systems of California' and Florida. A patient man in a hurry By BILL LAM Maroon Staff Reporter He likes fast cars, a trait one slightly suspects of him as he sits arms folded behind the wheel of a car in rush hour waiting for the light to turn green. Benjamin Wren, S.J., is a patient man in a great deal of hurry. His speech sometimes antagonizes his older religious peers and often the use of slang, commonly attributed to today's college students, mark his lectures. Words like screw, do your thing. Taken out of context the words mean little; but put them in one of Wren's lectures and they convey meaning. He jerks the gist of a chapter in history and interprets it into daily terms. Says one student, "Wren does not care what grade you get on your tests. He cares more that you learn. He teaches culture rather than just history." If Wren represents on thing it is the tact that a priest is human. Cover up his Roman collar and he is a man who has changed with the times, someone who is aware of the world today and is willing to do something about it. In conversation his ideas are somewhat radical and could very well lead one to believe that he is one of a new generation of Jesuits in America. But Wren could be said to be radical in his own peculiar way. "If I believed in their philosophy about celibacy, and some other crap which I don't buy, I wouldn't be wearing this," he remarks, pointing emphatically to his Roman collar neatly set around his rather long neck. He was referring to an article by Joseph L'Hreaux about a group of young Jesuits in America whose radical ideas has virtually split the order into two armed camps. L'Kreaux emphasized in his article "Today the word 'obedience' is rarely mentioned when Jesuits get together. For Wren the vows he has taken mean a great deal. "I believe in Jesus Christ, the son of God and I believe in the Pope," he says. Wren, stands tall, not in the sense that he is 6'4" (which he is) but in that he commands respect from those who know the man. Says Barbara Steinberg, a Loyola faculty member, "When I hear the name Ben Wren I think of a breath of fresh air. ..a beautiful molding of austerity and freedom." Born of an Fnglish father and a Chinese mother, Wren was brought up with a profound understanding of occidental and oriental culture. It is perhaps this factor that influences his belief that truth comes in all colors. "I argue a lot," he says. Wren does not believe that a single culture can sav that it has a monoploy on beauty and glory. "Whenever someone here starts telling me how great the West is, I come right up and mention something about the glories of the Orient. The same thing is true on the opposite side. When I was in Kyoto, in Japan I was with a group who started talking about how great the East was, he recalls in his characteristic sometimes monotonous tone. In answer of course, Wren began mentioning the West and its greatness. "They did not like the idea," Wren quicklv added. Commenting on Wren's ways of seeing things. Miss Steinberg says that in conversation Wren tries to transcend his own experience and look at the world through the eyes of others. Wren is a conversationlist. If there is one thing that characterizes him is his ability to begin a sentence under one breath and continue in his' somewhat high-pitched voice with always iust that little more breath left to round the last syllable regardless of length. At the moment Wren enjovs being a faculty member in the history department at Loyola. He is currently working on his doctoral dissertation on New Orleans' trade relations with the East covering the period from Commodore Perry's mission to Japan unitl 1969. He sees his commitment at Loyola as an attempt to open up a new horizon-Oriental history, which he says "is a whole world left untouched here." ' His love of Oriental culture prompted in him an immense interest in various forms of Oriental martial arts although he stresses that he has not yet mastered any. He admires Zen Budhism only in as far as technique of meditation is concerned. So people, be not suprised if you should on day stride into a classroom and see a figure perched on a desk and assuming a lotus position. It may very well be a Wren-Father Benjamin Wren that is. Father Ben Wren, S. J. Loyola president entangled in stock fraud controversy Loyola's president, the Very Rev. Michael F. Kennelly, S.J., has become entangled in a multimillion dollar stock fraud controversy following the filing of a suit by the Securities and Exchange Commission in Dallas last week. One of those named in the suit. Frank W. Sharp, has been a trusted adviser of Father Kennelly's for years and, according to a report in the Houston Post had recently attempted to get Loyola to deposit $50 million in a deal to obtain $200 million for one of Sharp's banks. The SEC has charged that Sharp and other prominent financiers have consistently tried to sell unregistered stock in three Texas companies and to mislead not only potential buyers of the stocks but various government agencies as well. According to the SEC, Sharp used the Jesuit Fathers of Houston, Inc., as a "device" to obtain funds from the public and then used the money to manipulate stock in various Texas companies. Father Kennelly, who just came to Loyola last August, was president of the Houston Jesuits at the time and relied heavily on Sharp foi financial advice. In a statement to the Maroon this week, Father Kennelly said he could not comment on the actions taken by the SEC at this time. "I do not believe," he said, "that it would be appropriate for me to make any public statement concerning any of these law suits which may in any way adversely affect the rights of any of the party to these actions. "I have been advised by the attorneys for Loyola University that, in their opinion, the university is not subject to any liability as a result of these actions." Father Kennelly is not a defendent in the SEC's civil suit but has given voluntary testimony to Federal investigators. In a three and a half-hour interview held Jan. 13. Father Kennelly told the SEC he had always considered Sharp a "great benefactor" of the Jesuits. When Kennelly was first trying to establish a Jesuit high school in Houston, Sharp not only gave the Jesuits 85 acres for the school but eventually gave them 20,000 shares ol stock in the Sharpstown State Bank in Houston, which he controls. The SEC suit says the stock was given ostensibly as a gift but was "actually to gain (the Jesuits') confidence." In return. Sharp, a Protestant, received a number of Catholic honors, including an audience with the Pope and the title of Founder of the New Orleans Jesuits. Kennelly meanwhile was named an honorary director of the Sharpstown bank. Sharp came to be one of Kennelly's most trusted financial advisers during the years the priest was president of the Houston Jesuits and of Strake Jesuit College Preparatory School. Father Kennelly told the SEC that although he did not understand most of the financial deals Sharp proposed the Jesuits make, he had always followed Sharp's advice. The $50 million Loyola deal, according to the Houston Post, arose last fall when Sharp approached Kennelly at a directors' meeting of the Sharpstown bank. Sharp asked the priest to sign a letter stating that Loyola would deposit $50 million in the bank. Father Kennelly said that in return. Sharp "would obtain in Kurope stocks of tremendous value" and "the Jesuit Fathers would be given a huge gift" to set up a foundation for Loyola. Father Kennelly told Sharp that he had no authority to sign such a letter, even though he was president of Lovola. Presumably, a proposal would have to be referred to Loyola's Board of Directors, the university's legal owners, and the Board of Regents, the president's chief financial advisers. No Loyola official has been available for a public explanation of where the university was to obtain $50 million in transferable cash. Before any deal could be completed though, Sharp's financial practices came under scrutiny by the SEC. Three weeks ago, on Jan. 8, Father Kennelly resigned from the directors of the Sharpstown bank and, on Jan. 13, submitted himself to SEC investigators. In doing so, he says he went against advice from Sharp. In his sworn testimony, Father Kennelly said Sharp's lawyers had told him not to answer any questions from SEC investigators. He said that one of the lawyers suggested Sharp would be taking the Fifth Amendment " and then seemed to convey the impression that my posture should be pretty much the same." Father Kennelly said when he told Granger courses unknown to students Still unknown to most students, two new contemporary sociology courses taught by a distinguished visiting professor are available and students may sign up without paying the usual drop and add fees, according to Rev. Joseph A. Tetlow, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. Lester B. Granger, long-time national civil rights leader, will teach the courses during his stay at Loyola this semester as a Visiting University Professor. The courses Granger is teaching are: -Race in America Sociology 391 I:3OMWFSC344 -Major Issues in U. S. Society Sociology 407 2:30 MWFSC 343 Besides teaching, Granger plans to continue writing the memoirs of his distinguished career with the national Urban League. The league which operates in 64 American communities, pioneered in the fight for civil rights for black Americans. Granger, who first joined the New Jersey Urban League in 1919, was appointed executive director of the National Urban League in 1941. During his years with the league, Granger furthered civil rights through contacts with the U.S. government as well as through innovative programs followed by the league. As special assistant to the Secretary of the Navy during WW 11, Granger advised the federal government how to best bring blacks into the war effort. On his recommendations, the Navy ended all segregation and discrimination policies and the other branches of the armed forces followed suit. For this work Granger was awarded the Navy's highest civilian decoration, the Distinguished Civilian Service Award in 1945. He also received the President's Medal of Merit for helping to integrate the armed forces. Also during the war the league was an instrument in integrating blacks into the states-side war-production effprt. According to league statistics, some 150,000 blacks were placed in assembly and other jobs in plants which had never hired blacks before. According to Tetlow, the fees for dropping and adding have been suspended in the case of Granger's courses because the new courses were not sceduled in time for the printing of the pre-registration schedule in December. Tetlow said Wednesday he was sending circulars to all departmental chairmen notifying them about Granger's courses and asking them to encourage their students to sign up for one of them. The dean said he "had anticipated that courses would be a late development." He added that the only other thing that could have been done to notify students of the courses would have been to include notices of them in registration mail. Tetlow noted that Granger had come to Loyola not only as a teacher, but as a "resource person". He said he hoped students and faculty would seek Granger outside the classroom because "he himself has made history." Lester Granger (continued on page 4)

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loyola maroon Vol. XLVII Loyola University, New Orleans, La., 70118, Friday, January 29,1971 No. 14 Father Molloy dies The Rev. J. Joseph Molloy, S.J., former vice-president for student affairs at Loyola University, died Wednesday, Jan. 13, at the university following a long illness. A native of Washington, D.C., Father Molloy joined the Loyola faculty as instructor in theology following his ordination in 1947. He left the university in 1951 to become assistant principal and director of athletics at Jesuit High School in Dallas. In 1953 he was named assistant pastor of Immaculate Conception Church in El Paso, Texas, returning to Loyola to serve for five years as director of athletics and assistant professor of theology. In 1959 he became assistant pastor of Immaculate Conception Church in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and held a similar post at Sacred Heart Church in Tampa, Florida, before rejoining Loyola in 1965 as university chaplain. He was appointed dean of students in 1966 and in 1967 was elevated to the position of vice-president for student affairs with overall direction of housing, financial aid, health services, athletics, student organizations and student life. Father Molloy entered the Society of Jesus at Grand Coteau, Louisiana, in 1931 and was ordained a priest by Archbishop Joseph F. Rummel in 1947. He received his bachelor of arts degree from St. Louis University and his licentiate in sacred theology from St. Mary's College, Kansas. During his Jesuit studies, he taught for several years at Jesuit High School in New Orleans. The priest is survived by a brother, Leo T. Molloy of Riverdale, Maryland, and three neices, Mrs. Richard Connallon, Roselle, New Jersey; Mrs. Manuel Rodriquez, East Orange, New Jersey; and Mrs. Charles Whitlow, Hyattsville, Maryland. The Very Rev. President Michael Kennelly, S.J Father Molloy, S.J Women's lib group charges discrimination By STEVE VAKAS Maroon Staff Reporter A national women's liberation group has filed charges of sex discrimination against Loyola with the Department of Health, Hducation and Welfare (HEW). The group, Women's Equity Action League (WEAL), has requested "an immediate compliance review" to include a "full scale investigation of admission policies, financial aid to women students, placement of women graduates; hiring and promotion policies for both staff and faculty; and salary inequities," in a recent letter to HEW. A HEW compliance review is scheduled for Feb. 3 and 4, according to Loyola business manager Tom Preston. During that visit, HEW officials will be investigating Loyola's minority hiring practices, primarily with regard to race. He said that WEAL's charges of sex discrimination came to his attention this week, after he had prepared a report of several hundred pages for the compliance review. Although attention to WEAL's charges might be stalled for several weeks, Preston said he would attempt to clear up the new charges to the satisfaction of the federal officials, making this the last HEW visit. He said next week's review is the university's fourth in the last two years. In its charges against Loyola WEAL states that 79% of all women holding professorial ranks are performing their duties as assistant professors, the lowest rank. The group points out that women hold four positions here as full professors, as opposed to 45 men holding the same title. The charges also claim that two per cent (one woman) holds the position of associate professor. Preston said he doesn't anticipate too much of a problem with the sex discrimination charges. He pointed out that there is a woman on the Board of Regents, Miss Margaret Lauer, and that a woman is president 01 me faculty senate, Miss Janet Riley. In addition to their other requests, WEAL also asked HEW to suspend all current government contract negotiations until "all inequities are eliminated and an acceptable plan of affirmative action is implemented." The charges are filed under Executive Order 11375 which forbids all federal contractors from discriminating on the basis of sex. However, no contracts can be suspended unless the contractor fails to comply with HEW findings. Loyola is but one of the 230 schools charged with sex discrimination by WEAL in the last year. Among others, WEAL has charged the entire state university systems of California' and Florida. A patient man in a hurry By BILL LAM Maroon Staff Reporter He likes fast cars, a trait one slightly suspects of him as he sits arms folded behind the wheel of a car in rush hour waiting for the light to turn green. Benjamin Wren, S.J., is a patient man in a great deal of hurry. His speech sometimes antagonizes his older religious peers and often the use of slang, commonly attributed to today's college students, mark his lectures. Words like screw, do your thing. Taken out of context the words mean little; but put them in one of Wren's lectures and they convey meaning. He jerks the gist of a chapter in history and interprets it into daily terms. Says one student, "Wren does not care what grade you get on your tests. He cares more that you learn. He teaches culture rather than just history." If Wren represents on thing it is the tact that a priest is human. Cover up his Roman collar and he is a man who has changed with the times, someone who is aware of the world today and is willing to do something about it. In conversation his ideas are somewhat radical and could very well lead one to believe that he is one of a new generation of Jesuits in America. But Wren could be said to be radical in his own peculiar way. "If I believed in their philosophy about celibacy, and some other crap which I don't buy, I wouldn't be wearing this," he remarks, pointing emphatically to his Roman collar neatly set around his rather long neck. He was referring to an article by Joseph L'Hreaux about a group of young Jesuits in America whose radical ideas has virtually split the order into two armed camps. L'Kreaux emphasized in his article "Today the word 'obedience' is rarely mentioned when Jesuits get together. For Wren the vows he has taken mean a great deal. "I believe in Jesus Christ, the son of God and I believe in the Pope," he says. Wren, stands tall, not in the sense that he is 6'4" (which he is) but in that he commands respect from those who know the man. Says Barbara Steinberg, a Loyola faculty member, "When I hear the name Ben Wren I think of a breath of fresh air. ..a beautiful molding of austerity and freedom." Born of an Fnglish father and a Chinese mother, Wren was brought up with a profound understanding of occidental and oriental culture. It is perhaps this factor that influences his belief that truth comes in all colors. "I argue a lot," he says. Wren does not believe that a single culture can sav that it has a monoploy on beauty and glory. "Whenever someone here starts telling me how great the West is, I come right up and mention something about the glories of the Orient. The same thing is true on the opposite side. When I was in Kyoto, in Japan I was with a group who started talking about how great the East was, he recalls in his characteristic sometimes monotonous tone. In answer of course, Wren began mentioning the West and its greatness. "They did not like the idea," Wren quicklv added. Commenting on Wren's ways of seeing things. Miss Steinberg says that in conversation Wren tries to transcend his own experience and look at the world through the eyes of others. Wren is a conversationlist. If there is one thing that characterizes him is his ability to begin a sentence under one breath and continue in his' somewhat high-pitched voice with always iust that little more breath left to round the last syllable regardless of length. At the moment Wren enjovs being a faculty member in the history department at Loyola. He is currently working on his doctoral dissertation on New Orleans' trade relations with the East covering the period from Commodore Perry's mission to Japan unitl 1969. He sees his commitment at Loyola as an attempt to open up a new horizon-Oriental history, which he says "is a whole world left untouched here." ' His love of Oriental culture prompted in him an immense interest in various forms of Oriental martial arts although he stresses that he has not yet mastered any. He admires Zen Budhism only in as far as technique of meditation is concerned. So people, be not suprised if you should on day stride into a classroom and see a figure perched on a desk and assuming a lotus position. It may very well be a Wren-Father Benjamin Wren that is. Father Ben Wren, S. J. Loyola president entangled in stock fraud controversy Loyola's president, the Very Rev. Michael F. Kennelly, S.J., has become entangled in a multimillion dollar stock fraud controversy following the filing of a suit by the Securities and Exchange Commission in Dallas last week. One of those named in the suit. Frank W. Sharp, has been a trusted adviser of Father Kennelly's for years and, according to a report in the Houston Post had recently attempted to get Loyola to deposit $50 million in a deal to obtain $200 million for one of Sharp's banks. The SEC has charged that Sharp and other prominent financiers have consistently tried to sell unregistered stock in three Texas companies and to mislead not only potential buyers of the stocks but various government agencies as well. According to the SEC, Sharp used the Jesuit Fathers of Houston, Inc., as a "device" to obtain funds from the public and then used the money to manipulate stock in various Texas companies. Father Kennelly, who just came to Loyola last August, was president of the Houston Jesuits at the time and relied heavily on Sharp foi financial advice. In a statement to the Maroon this week, Father Kennelly said he could not comment on the actions taken by the SEC at this time. "I do not believe," he said, "that it would be appropriate for me to make any public statement concerning any of these law suits which may in any way adversely affect the rights of any of the party to these actions. "I have been advised by the attorneys for Loyola University that, in their opinion, the university is not subject to any liability as a result of these actions." Father Kennelly is not a defendent in the SEC's civil suit but has given voluntary testimony to Federal investigators. In a three and a half-hour interview held Jan. 13. Father Kennelly told the SEC he had always considered Sharp a "great benefactor" of the Jesuits. When Kennelly was first trying to establish a Jesuit high school in Houston, Sharp not only gave the Jesuits 85 acres for the school but eventually gave them 20,000 shares ol stock in the Sharpstown State Bank in Houston, which he controls. The SEC suit says the stock was given ostensibly as a gift but was "actually to gain (the Jesuits') confidence." In return. Sharp, a Protestant, received a number of Catholic honors, including an audience with the Pope and the title of Founder of the New Orleans Jesuits. Kennelly meanwhile was named an honorary director of the Sharpstown bank. Sharp came to be one of Kennelly's most trusted financial advisers during the years the priest was president of the Houston Jesuits and of Strake Jesuit College Preparatory School. Father Kennelly told the SEC that although he did not understand most of the financial deals Sharp proposed the Jesuits make, he had always followed Sharp's advice. The $50 million Loyola deal, according to the Houston Post, arose last fall when Sharp approached Kennelly at a directors' meeting of the Sharpstown bank. Sharp asked the priest to sign a letter stating that Loyola would deposit $50 million in the bank. Father Kennelly said that in return. Sharp "would obtain in Kurope stocks of tremendous value" and "the Jesuit Fathers would be given a huge gift" to set up a foundation for Loyola. Father Kennelly told Sharp that he had no authority to sign such a letter, even though he was president of Lovola. Presumably, a proposal would have to be referred to Loyola's Board of Directors, the university's legal owners, and the Board of Regents, the president's chief financial advisers. No Loyola official has been available for a public explanation of where the university was to obtain $50 million in transferable cash. Before any deal could be completed though, Sharp's financial practices came under scrutiny by the SEC. Three weeks ago, on Jan. 8, Father Kennelly resigned from the directors of the Sharpstown bank and, on Jan. 13, submitted himself to SEC investigators. In doing so, he says he went against advice from Sharp. In his sworn testimony, Father Kennelly said Sharp's lawyers had told him not to answer any questions from SEC investigators. He said that one of the lawyers suggested Sharp would be taking the Fifth Amendment " and then seemed to convey the impression that my posture should be pretty much the same." Father Kennelly said when he told Granger courses unknown to students Still unknown to most students, two new contemporary sociology courses taught by a distinguished visiting professor are available and students may sign up without paying the usual drop and add fees, according to Rev. Joseph A. Tetlow, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. Lester B. Granger, long-time national civil rights leader, will teach the courses during his stay at Loyola this semester as a Visiting University Professor. The courses Granger is teaching are: -Race in America Sociology 391 I:3OMWFSC344 -Major Issues in U. S. Society Sociology 407 2:30 MWFSC 343 Besides teaching, Granger plans to continue writing the memoirs of his distinguished career with the national Urban League. The league which operates in 64 American communities, pioneered in the fight for civil rights for black Americans. Granger, who first joined the New Jersey Urban League in 1919, was appointed executive director of the National Urban League in 1941. During his years with the league, Granger furthered civil rights through contacts with the U.S. government as well as through innovative programs followed by the league. As special assistant to the Secretary of the Navy during WW 11, Granger advised the federal government how to best bring blacks into the war effort. On his recommendations, the Navy ended all segregation and discrimination policies and the other branches of the armed forces followed suit. For this work Granger was awarded the Navy's highest civilian decoration, the Distinguished Civilian Service Award in 1945. He also received the President's Medal of Merit for helping to integrate the armed forces. Also during the war the league was an instrument in integrating blacks into the states-side war-production effprt. According to league statistics, some 150,000 blacks were placed in assembly and other jobs in plants which had never hired blacks before. According to Tetlow, the fees for dropping and adding have been suspended in the case of Granger's courses because the new courses were not sceduled in time for the printing of the pre-registration schedule in December. Tetlow said Wednesday he was sending circulars to all departmental chairmen notifying them about Granger's courses and asking them to encourage their students to sign up for one of them. The dean said he "had anticipated that courses would be a late development." He added that the only other thing that could have been done to notify students of the courses would have been to include notices of them in registration mail. Tetlow noted that Granger had come to Loyola not only as a teacher, but as a "resource person". He said he hoped students and faculty would seek Granger outside the classroom because "he himself has made history." Lester Granger (continued on page 4)